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Why Is There No Power in One Room?
Emergency? Call now
24/7 response across Sydney metro · Licensed Level 2 ASP
A single dead room in a Sydney home is almost always caused by a tripped circuit breaker, a damaged outlet, or a cable nicked during renovation. If any outlet is hot, sparking, or smells burnt it is a live hazard — call 0433 462 902 now, or book a non-urgent diagnostic online.
Faults like these can sit dormant for weeks — a dead outlet behind a TV bracket, a faulty light circuit in a child’s bedroom, or a sparking power point in the kitchen — before someone investigates. Sydney Electrical Service is dispatched 24/7 across every Sydney suburb.
What This Fault Means
Power circuits in Australian homes are typically wired as a daisy chain: power flows from the switchboard into the first outlet, then loops to the next, and the next, until the last outlet on the circuit. A break, loose connection, or fault at any point can leave every outlet downstream of that point dead — even though the rest of the house works perfectly.
Lighting circuits are usually wired similarly. A single bedroom with no overhead light may have a switch fault, a damaged ceiling rose, or a degraded loop connection — but there’s no need to suspect the whole house.
Modern installations under AS/NZS 3000 have separate RCD protection on each circuit, so when one room loses power you can usually look directly at the relevant breaker or RCBO at the switchboard for the diagnosis.
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Common Causes
- A tripped breaker or RCD on the room's circuit — the simplest and most common cause
- A loose connection inside an outlet — back-stab terminations are a frequent offender
- A burnt-out power point from prolonged high load (heaters, hairdryers)
- A damaged switch with a broken internal contact
- A pinched or cut cable behind plasterboard from a recent picture or shelf install
- Rodent damage to cabling above ceilings (common in older Sydney homes with roof-cavity access)
- Water ingress from a roof leak or bathroom seal failure soaking into the cabling
- A failed downlight transformer or driver tripping the lighting circuit
- A degraded ceiling rose with corroded loop terminations
- A burnt or melted plug-in adapter that has damaged the host outlet
- A DIY-installed device (smart switch, dimmer, sensor) that has failed or short-circuited
- An old aluminium connection point developing a high-resistance hotspot
Is It Dangerous?
Sometimes — and the warning signs always come from the outlets and switches themselves. Treat as urgent:
Red flags — call immediately if you see any of these:
- A burning, plastic, or fishy smell from any outlet or switch
- Discolouration, browning, or scorching around an outlet face
- A power point that is hot to touch
- Visible cracks or melting at a switch or outlet
- Crackling, buzzing, or sparking from any wall fitting
- A "hot" tingle when touching a metal lampshade or appliance casing on the dead circuit
- Lights flickering before the room went dead
What to Do Right Now
- Open the switchboard and look for a tripped breaker or RCD.
- If a breaker is tripped, switch it firmly OFF then ON. If it holds, monitor the room for any returning fault.
- If it trips again immediately, leave it OFF and call us. Don't keep resetting.
- Walk the affected room. Note which outlets and lights are dead, and whether any have visible damage.
- Unplug everything in the room. Sometimes a single faulty appliance has tripped the upstream protection.
- Photograph any discoloured or damaged outlet and note its location.
- If no breaker is tripped but power is still out, the fault is in an outlet, switch, or cable somewhere on the circuit — diagnostic work for a licensed electrician.
- If you smell burning anywhere, treat it as urgent and call us immediately.
When You Must Call a Licensed Electrician
Call Sydney Electrical Service on 0433 462 902 if:
- A breaker is tripped and won’t hold even with everything unplugged
- An outlet or switch is hot, scorched, sparking, or smells burnt
- The room has lost power with no breaker tripped
- Lights flicker and outlets randomly die throughout the day
- A previous renovation may have pinched a cable
- The home has aluminium wiring or 1970s “split-tube” cabling
- You feel a tingle from any metalwork
- You live in a strata block and only your unit is affected
We can attend, diagnose, and repair single-room faults within 24 hours across most Sydney suburbs. Where the fault is in a hidden cable, we use thermal imaging and cable tracing to minimise wall damage during diagnosis.
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Why DIY Is Dangerous and Illegal in NSW
Even something as small as replacing a power point face is licensed electrical work in NSW. Under the *Home Building Act 1989* and *Gas and Electricity (Consumer Safety) Act 2017*, all fixed electrical work — including outlets, switches, light fittings, and any cable termination — must be performed by a licensed electrician.
The risks of DIY in this category are not abstract. Loose terminations cause arcing and fires. Mis-wired actives and neutrals can leave appliance casings live at full mains voltage. Switching on a “repaired” outlet without insulation-resistance testing can re-energise an unsafe circuit. Insurance for electrical fires routinely excludes unlicensed work, and conveyancing inspections will flag DIY repairs on sale.
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How to Safely Investigate This Fault
-
Open the switchboard
and check for tripped breakers or RCDs. -
Reset any tripped device
firmly to OFF, then ON. -
If it won't hold, leave it OFF and stop here
call us. -
Walk the affected room
and identify every dead outlet, switch, and light. -
Unplug all appliances in the room
and reset the breaker. -
Reintroduce appliances one at a time
to identify any faulty unit. -
Inspect all outlets and switches
for discolouration, scorching, or melting. -
Photograph anything damaged
and call **0433 462 902** with the details.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does one room have no power but the rest of the house is fine?
Australian homes typically wire each room or zone as one circuit. A fault on that circuit — tripped breaker, damaged outlet, broken loop connection — only affects the rooms on it.
Could a faulty appliance be the cause?
Yes. A heater, kettle, hair dryer, vacuum cleaner, or aged fridge with internal short can trip the upstream breaker. Unplug everything, reset the breaker, and reintroduce appliances one at a time to find the culprit.
We just hung a TV bracket. Could that have caused it?
Almost certainly possible. Picture hooks, shelf brackets, TV mounts, and bathroom fittings frequently penetrate cables behind plasterboard. The damage can short the circuit immediately or cause an intermittent fault that worsens over weeks.
Why is only one half of the room dead?
Most rooms have outlets on a single subcircuit, but in older Sydney homes (particularly weatherboards and post-war brick) it is not unusual for half the room to feed from a different circuit than the other half. A fault on one circuit kills only its outlets.
The breaker isn't tripped but the room is dead. How is that possible?
A loose connection at an outlet or switch can break the circuit downstream without tripping the breaker. The breaker only trips on overcurrent, short-circuit, or earth leakage — not on a simple open circuit.
Should I be worried about a hot power point?
Yes — this is a fire warning. A hot outlet means the terminations are loose, corroded, or carrying more current than they can handle. Stop using it, switch off the breaker, and call us.
We have an old aluminium-wired house. Is that relevant?
Very. Aluminium-wired Sydney homes (typically 1960s–70s) develop high-resistance hotspots at terminations as the metal cycles through heat and cold. Random single-room outages are a classic symptom and a serious fire risk.
How quickly can you respond?
We dispatch 24/7 across all Sydney suburbs. Single-room faults without active fire or shock risk are typically attended within 4–24 hours; emergency conditions get a 30–90 minute response. Call 0433 462 902.
Can I fix a dead power point myself, or do I legally need an electrician in NSW?
In NSW, all electrical work — including swapping a power point — must be done by a licensed electrician; DIY repairs are illegal, can void your home insurance, and carry real safety risks. There are no homeowner exemptions, no matter how simple the job looks.
Is it safe to run extension leads from another room while I wait for an electrician?
A single heavy-duty extension lead used temporarily for low-draw devices is generally safe, but avoid daisy-chaining multiple leads, running them under rugs, or using them for high-draw appliances like heaters or fridges. Treat it as a short-term workaround only — not a fix.
How much does it cost to find and fix a dead circuit in a Sydney home?
Cost varies depending on what caused the fault and how accessible the wiring is — call Sydney Electrical Service on 0433 462 902 for a fixed-price quote before any work starts. Simple faults like a failed outlet or a tripped safety switch are often resolved in a single visit.
Will it get worse if I leave it — could a dead room circuit eventually cause a fire?
A circuit that tripped cleanly isn't an immediate fire risk, but the underlying cause — damaged wiring, a failing connection, or an overloaded circuit — can deteriorate and become dangerous if left undiagnosed. Getting it checked promptly is the safest approach.
Who should I call first — my energy provider like Ausgrid, or a private electrician?
If the dead room is inside your home and past the meter, it's your responsibility and requires a licensed electrician — your energy provider like Ausgrid or Endeavour Energy only handles faults on the network up to your meter box. Only contact your provider if the whole street or building is affected.
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